6,205 search results (0.033 seconds)
  1. Aldo - Unknown license
  2. Roloi by Mayfield Type Foundry, $15.00
    Originally inspired by the numerals on a vintage clock face, Roloi is a layered numbers font in the deco lettering style, and includes a full set of automatic clock symbols. Its geometric forms are typical of the deco style, but stop well-short of pure geometry. The irregular stroke and character widths work together to give the forms a warm and energetic, yet cohesive, feel. Roloi offers two layering styles—the personable Fill and the more dynamic Inline. Designed to be layered over the background Regular style, they both lend the forms an added level of interest. Roloi also includes a clock symbol for any and every time of day, rounded to the nearest five-minutes. The regular weight provides the circular clock background, while the Fill and Inline styles produce the clock hands. If ligatures are activated in your text-editing program, type out any time—such as 9:32, 12:05, etc.—and the proper clock symbol will be automatically substituted. Go ahead, type any time out below! To stop the automatic clock symbol substitution, simply deactivate ligatures. Because the clock symbols are standard ligatures, every major modern browser will support their use on the web. With some programing they could even be used to make a lightweight, text-only clock. In addition to the clock symbols and basic numerals, Roloi’s glyph range covers numeric superiors and inferiors, standard and arbitrary fractions, currency symbols, all of the punctuation and symbols commonly associated with currency, unicode clock Face symbols, the A M P / a m p letters, and alternates of the 1, 2, and 4, accessible by selecting Stylistic Set 1.
  3. Lankie by Gerald Gallo, $20.00
    Lankie is a clean, contemporary, geometric, condensed sans serif font. The font is ideal for headlines, titles, branding, small blocks of text or wherever a fresh font is desirable.
  4. Chamfer Stencil Sans JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    Based on some 1930s-era ‘block chamfer’ gummed paper lettering, Chamfer Stencil Sans JNL is a stenciled treatment of the original design; available in both regular and oblique versions.
  5. BPmolecules - Unknown license
  6. Zuboni Stencil by CastleType, $59.00
    Zuboni Stencil is a bold, uppercase typeface based on a Russian design from around 1920 (original designer unknown). Its extensive character set supports most European languages that use the Latin or Cyrillic alphabets as well as modern Greek.
  7. Tolkien Certar by Deniart Systems, $10.00
    Based on the more usual pen stroke form of 'runes', (translation of Elvish Certar and Cirth). The richest form was also known as the Alphabet of Daeron. NOTE: this font comes with an interpretation guide in pdf format.
  8. All Pro JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    All Pro JNL is a sports font embellished with stars and stripes and is perfect for team banners, sportswear and sports-oriented ads. The font contains alphabet, numerals and the most basic of punctuation with very little kerning.
  9. Farragut JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    An unusual take on Art Deco "streamlined" alphabets is found in Farragut JNL from Jeff Levine. Over-extended serifs on some letters and elongated horizontal strokes on others make for a new approach to a traditional lettering style.
  10. Stature by Gerald Gallo, $20.00
    Stature is an original, clean and crisp, sans serif compressed font, which can be used for text or as an effective display font. The font includes upper and lowercase alphabets, numbers, punctuation, accented characters, symbols, and miscellaneous characters.
  11. Totem by Cuda Wianki, $20.00
    TOTEM is simple and geometric, strong and modern. Previously it was designed for our logo and next we made the rest of the alphabet, including multi-language coverage and numbers. Totem has a nice set of ornaments too.
  12. Morro by Great Scott, $16.00
    Morro is based on simple geometric shapes – circles, triangles and rectangles. Imagine cutting circles, triangels and rectangles from paper and arranging them into letters where the outer edges form a filled figure. Arranging figures like this to form letters is nothing unique. You can find several beautiful examples of alphabets that inspired the creation of Morro. Everywhere from a 1936 booklet by Draughtsman called ”Modern lettering for all branches of commercial arts” to obvious examples is from the paragon of the design industry - Milton Glaser - with his typeface Baby Teeth. What sets Morro apart from other digitized versions of Glasers' ”Baby teeth”, or other similar designed fonts, is that Morro is expanded into lower case and also supports Basic latin, Western European, Central European, south Eastern European and Pinyin. There are also stylistic alternatives to some of the glyphs. Morro Regular works like a stencil and is accompanied by a block shadow style and an outline. The Morro family of fonts are layered and can be superimposed on each other to create several types of text effects.
  13. Ronnia by TypeTogether, $45.00
    One of the most remarkable characteristic of this humanistic sans serif is its versatility. Ronnia’s personality performs admirably in headlines, but is diffident enough for continuous text and small text alike. The heavier weights deliver very cohesive shapes, and they have been successfully used for branding and newspaper headlines. Its ten styles grant the designer a broad range of coherent color and texture variations in text blocks, necessary tools to solve complex information and editorial design problems. Ronnia has been mainly engineered for newspaper and magazine applications manifested in its properties: economic in use, highly legible, and approaching the reader with some friendliness and charm. Ronnia features about 800 characters per weight, including small caps, fractions, old style and lining numbers, scientific superior/inferior figures, and a set of symbols and arrows. It supports over 40 languages that use the Latin extended alphabet. Ronnia Basic is a reduced version of Ronnia. It is still an OT-font but without any particular features except of a set of ligatures, class-kerning and language support including CE and Baltic.
  14. TT Nooks by TypeType, $39.00
    TT Nooks useful links: Specimen | Graphic presentation | Customization options TT Nooks is an experimental font family that includes a high contrast serif, TT Nooks, and an upright italic, TT Nooks Script. Despite the difference in style, both subfamilies get along well, which is partially thanks to their similar proportions. Each of the subfamilies includes 4 weights: Light, Regular, Bold and Black. The main subfamily is TT Nooks—a stylish high-contrast serif with a light touch of self-centeredness. If TT Nooks were a person, it would be an elegant lady with an independent and firm personality. In the original sketches of TT Nooks there were traces of a broad pen, but in the course of further evolution the typeface moved away from this style, retaining only the high contrast of strokes. In addition, in the process of design searches TT Nooks has obtained a touch of geometricity. The serifs in TT Nooks stand out especially visibly thanks to their geometric shape that resembles slippers. In addition to their peculiarity, such serifs add stability to the font and allow better compensation of the black and white ratio within the letters. TT Nooks has small capitals for Latin and Cyrillic alphabets, as well as a set of stylistic alternates (including some figures) that makes the typeface a bit more geometric. In addition, we have drawn more than 25 ligatures, including ligatures for capital letters, slashed zero and many other useful OpenType features. TT Nooks Script is a complementary family designed to harmoniously extend the main family and expand its scope. The forms of the characters in bold and light fonts of TT Nooks Script are quite different. For example, Black & Bold have high contrast strokes and an open aperture, and in Regular & Light the aperture of the characters is closed. TT Nooks also has small capitals for Latin and Cyrillic alphabets, ligatures, oldstyle figures and other OpenType features. In light faces, TT Nooks Script is more humanist and has artifacts inherent to the continuous movement of a flat pen. In bold faces, TT Nooks Script has a very dense and dynamic typing rhythm, and the shape of the letters begins to geometrize. We had had the difficult task of preserving the continuity of forms between bold and light faces, and we have managed to solve it thanks to the found rhythm, which united different fonts, and proximate stylistic solutions.
  15. Illumini by The Infamous Foundry, $39.00
    Illumini is a thin and rounded neoish sans-serif suitable for everything from logotypes to large text blocks. It contains several of the traditional ligatures normally found in serif fonts.
  16. TDF Arena by TypeDrift, $15.00
    TDF Arena is a solid block font built for a sellout crowd. One of our best-selling typefaces is now available here, exclusively in a grunge style with Monotype Fonts.
  17. Bevelle by Gerald Gallo, $20.00
    Bevelle is a serif font with characters that have beveled corners. It is ideal for headlines, titles, branding, small blocks of text or wherever a clean, fresh look is desired.
  18. Schwarz by Miguel Ibarra Design, $20.00
    Schwarz is a Black Letter typeface inspired by all that is black. Jagged edges and sharp diagonals make Schwarz a head banging font. Some stylistic alternates and ligatures are also available.
  19. Lithos by Adobe, $35.00
    Old Greek inscriptions were Carol Twombly's inspiration when she created Lithos, which appeared with Adobe in 1990. The alphabet is composed exclusively of capital letters, which can also be used as initials combined with other fonts, such as Caslon.
  20. Hello August by Good Java Studio, $20.00
    Introducing Hello August Hello August a playfully script font make from handlettering ideas in typeface. This font includes full of Alphabetical glyphs, Numerals, and punctuation. This is so perfect for invitations, monograms, wedding, fashion, branding, label, handlettering or logotype.
  21. Inkblock by Turtle Arts, $20.00
    Inkblock is based on various ink printing and rubbings from an ancient wood type set. Inkblock the alphabet has lots of detail, so looks great printed large. It's a good headline font or whenever an antique look is needed.
  22. Display Dots Three Sans by Gerald Gallo, $20.00
    Display Dots Three Sans and Serif are display fonts not intended for text use. They were designed specifically for display, headline, logotype, branding, and similar applications. Display Dots Three Sans and Serif include an uppercase alphabet, numbers, and punctuation.
  23. Display Dots Three Serif by Gerald Gallo, $20.00
    Display Dots Three Sans and Serif are display fonts not intended for text use. They were designed specifically for display, headline, logotype, branding, and similar applications. Display Dots Three Sans and Serif include an uppercase alphabet, numbers, and punctuation.
  24. Display Dots Four Sans by Gerald Gallo, $20.00
    Display Dots Four Sans and Serif are display fonts not intended for text use. They were designed specifically for display, headline, logotype, branding, and similar applications. Display Dots Four Sans and Serif include an uppercase alphabet, numbers, and punctuation.
  25. Hello Winter by Good Java Studio, $20.00
    Introducing Hello Winter Hello Winteris a playfully display font make from handdrawn ideas in typeface. This font includes full of Alphabetical glyphs, Numerals, and punctuation. This is so perfect for invitations, monograms, wedding, fashion, branding, label, handdrawn or logotype.
  26. Winter Sweety by Good Java Studio, $20.00
    Introducing Winter Sweety Winter Sweety a playfully display font make from handdrawn ideas in typeface. This font includes full of Alphabetical glyphs, Numerals, and punctuation. This is so perfect for invitations, monograms, wedding, fashion, branding, label, handdrawn or logotype.
  27. Display Dots Four Serif by Gerald Gallo, $20.00
    Display Dots Four Sans and Serif are display fonts not intended for text use. They were designed specifically for display, headline, logotype, branding, and similar applications. Display Dots Four Sans and Serif include an uppercase alphabet, numbers, and punctuation.
  28. Cross Stitch Majestic by Gerald Gallo, $20.00
    Cross Stitch Majestic is not intended for text use. It was designed specifically for use as fancy monograms or initials. Cross Stitch Majestic has an uppercase alphabet, 33 stitches tall, and is located under the shift+character set keys.
  29. The Crew Pro by The Type Fetish, $25.00
    The Crew Pro is based on the logo of the seminal punk band 7 Seconds. It was expanded to include extended Latin, extended Cyrillic and Greek alphabets so it will work with most languages in Europe and the Americas.
  30. Cross Stitch Graceful by Gerald Gallo, $20.00
    Cross Stitch Graceful is not intended for text use. It was designed specifically for use as fancy monograms or initials. Cross Stitch Graceful has an uppercase alphabet, 48 stitches tall, and is located under the shift+character set keys.
  31. Nouveau Stencil Ornate JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    A 1902 publication entitled "Lettering for Schools & Colleges" had an example of an ornate, hand drawn stencil alphabet in the Art Nouveau style. This is now available digitally as Nouveau Stencil Ornate JNL, in both regular and oblique versions.
  32. Dexterous by Gerald Gallo, $20.00
    Dexterous is my interpretation of an antique typeface. The font includes upper and lowercase alphabets with alternate "E F L M S T" characters and alternate "c e m s" characters, numbers, punctuation, accented characters, symbols, and miscellaneous characters.
  33. December Holidays by Good Java Studio, $19.00
    Introducing December Holidays December Holidays a playfully display font make from handdrawn ideas in typeface. This font includes full of Alphabetical glyphs, Numerals, and punctuation. This is so perfect for invitations, monograms, wedding, fashion, branding, label, handdrawn or logotype.
  34. Sign Expert JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    An elegant, yet informal Roman alphabet with Art Nouveau influences was found amidst the pages of the 1922 edition of “The Expert Sign Painter”. It is now available digitally as Sign Expert JNL in both regular and oblique versions.
  35. Stena by LetterPalette, $35.00
    Stena is a very functional sans serif typeface with calligraphic feel, especially designed for contemporary typography. This family features deep and sharp ink-traps as part of its design. Thanks to its proportions, solid and balanced forms, combination of straight and curve lines, high x-height and expressive ink-traps, Stena combines readability with a strong personality. This dynamic typeface provides advanced typographical support with features such as ligatures, alternate characters, stylistics sets, fractions, etc. It also comes with a complete range of figure set options – oldstyle and lining figures, each in tabular and proportional widths. This carefully designed family consists of 8 weights, ranging from Thin to Black, each with matching true italics. It comes with a set of 566 characters per weight, supporting over 40 different languages using the Latin alphabet. Stena is the ideal choice for editorial, branding, corporate identity, and more.
  36. Shoika by Tropical Type Foundry, $29.99
    Shoika is a celebration of geometry. It’s a typographic quest for purity with a touch of hidden gems in the form of unique details and characters. Shoika is perfect for the modern designer who needs a solid, refined and versatile font family for branding, UX, web, packaging and editorial jobs. Shoika presents a wide range of weights (18 fonts), supports an extensive variety of Latin alphabet-based languages (over 200), and it has been manually kerned and auto-hinted for enhanced performance on screen. It includes several OpenType features like case diacritics, tabular figures, arrows, ordinals, inferior and superior figures, numerator and denominator figures, fractions, circled figures, black circled figures, outline dingbats and solid dingbats. All typefaces from Tropical Type Foundry include free updates and free technical support. For custom enquiries don’t hesitate to get in touch: tropicaltypefoundry@gmail.com Imagery credits: Unsplash (Photo), DrawKit and RawPixel (Illustrations).
  37. River City Sandwriting by River City, $24.98
    I searched all over the internet looking for a realistic sand writing font and came away empty handed. Undaunted by this, I grabbed my business partner, Mary and trekked down to our local river, the Arkansas (pronounced ar-KAN-sas around here). Using sticks, we scratched out the entire alphabet in the sand, including upper & lowercase, and punctuation marks! I photographed the characters, converted them to line art on my computer and used font creating software to turn it into a true type font! This font was designed for adding dates, places and messages to your beach photos that looked as if you wrote it in the sand before you took the picture! It is a decorative font best used in large, headline sizes. To make it appear more realistic, select a darker color from the sand in the photo to use for the type instead of black!
  38. Blooming Meadow by ParaType, $25.00
    A set of original ornamental symbols was designed by Viktor Kharyk and licensed to ParaType in 2007. The name was inspired by the famous book “Champ Fleury” by Geoffroy Tory (1529) but the theme of blooming meadow was embodied much more literally. Each ornamental motive has a real prototype in flora. Mainly there are plants raising on Ukrainian wooded steppe. Plants were chosen for their Ukrainian and Latin names begin of proper letters from Ukrainian and Latin alphabets. The font is consisted of two styles: Day for normal and Night for reversed that reminds night lighting by its unexpected distribution of black and white areas. Fleurons may be used for creation of ornamental surfaces, composed borders and corners, decoration of any materials, and even as botanical illustrations. Blooming Meadow Day have been adjudged Award of Excellence in Type Design at TypeArt’05 international type design contest
  39. New Kakuji by Edomoji Type, $15.00
    New Kakuji is designed from the Kakuji style of characters originating during the Edo period of Japan. New Kakuji has expanded the historical character set to include the surnames from the ancient Chinese text: Hundred Family Surnames, as well as the most common surnames in Japan, in addition to many other historically and culturally significant words, going well beyond the scope of characters that were used in the Edo period. No other font has expanded the character set of the Kakuji Style to the same extent as New Kakuji. A Latin alphabet expansion inspired by the old Kakuji style has also been included for western audiences and designers. New Kakuji contains over 500 Chinese/Japanese characters along with over 200 additional Latin characters or symbols. The solid and blocky style of New Kakuji is ideal for seal designs or other branding designs and should be used at larger point sizes.
  40. Azbuka by Monotype, $29.99
    The Azbuka™ typeface family has its roots in a fairly pedestrian source. “The idea came in part from an old sign in London that read ‘SPRINKLER STOP VALVE’,” says Dave Farey, designer of the typeface. Like all good sign spotters, Farey took a photograph of the sign and filed it away for possible use in a lettering or typeface design project. In Prague a number of years later, the street signs reminded Farey of the London signage - and his camera came out again. Comparing the two back in his studio, he realized that the signs from London and Prague were not as similar as he initially thought. However, they were enough alike to serve as the foundation for a no-frills, 21st century sans serif typeface family. “I wanted to draw a wide range of weights, italic and condensed designs all in one go,” recalls Farey, “rather than add on to the family later.” His goal was to create a family that could be used for text and display copy, with sufficient weights to provide a broad typographic palette. Indeed, the completed design, created in collaboration with fellow type designer Richard Dawson, consists of twenty typefaces in eight weights ranging from extra light to extra black. The five mid-range designs have complementary italics. Seven condensed designs round out the family. Azbuka’s lighter weights perform remarkably well in blocks of text composition. “They’re clean and legible - and perhaps a little boring,” says Farey, “but they are perfect for copy with a down-to-earth, yet contemporary flavor.” The heavier weights are equally well suited for a variety of display uses. The designs are authoritative but not overbearing and will readily make a strong statement without calling attention to themselves. The condensed weights of Azbuka are ideal for those instances where you have a lot to say - and not much room to say it. The name Azbuka? It’s Russian for “alphabet.” And what more appropriate name could there be for this utilitarian, industrial-strength type family than alphabet? The Azbuka family is available as a suite of OpenType Pro fonts. Graphic communicators can now work with this versatile design while taking advantage of OpenType’s capabilities. The Azbuka Pro fonts also offer an extended character set that supports most Central European and many Eastern European languages
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